Philippines military identifies IS-linked militant killed as Indonesian named 'Mohisen'

COTABATO CITY: Philippines military has identified one of the four Islamic State-linked militants killed in bombing operations in the southern Philippines as an Indonesian.

According to the Philippine Daily Inquirer, Defence Secretary Delfin Lorenzana said the Indonesian as having the alias “Mohisen” was one of the four accompanying wanted IS-linked terrorist Isnilon Hapilon on his mission to create a caliphate in Mindanao.

The military initially identified one of the four killed as a Malaysian.

He said Hapilon was wounded in the military air strikes three days earlier in the mountain town of Butig, Lanao del Sur and intelligence indicated he was being carried by four men in a makeshift stretcher.

Hapilon is on the United States list of “Most Wanted Terrorists” and has a US$5mil (RM22.6mil) bounty on his head from Washington for the 2001 kidnapping of three Americans in the Philippines, two of whom had been killed.

Security analysts say the IS group has recognised Hapilon as its leader in South-East Asia.

The military said it was making sure that no innocent lives are lost in the anti-terror operation in Sulu, Basilan, Maguindanao and Lanao del Sur by conducting “surgical air strikes” on specific targets.

The Philippine Air Force said two Korean-made FA-50 jets and helicopter gunships conducted the aerial assaults.

The FA-50s dropped bombs over rebel positions in Butig on Wednesday, the first time the newly acquired fighter jets had been used in combat.

In the wake of the military operations, President Rodrigo Duterte warned Moro rebels to “forget about peace” if they provide sanctuary to terror groups being pursued by government troops in an ongoing offensive backed by fighter jets and helicopter gunships in Mindanao.

According to the report, Duterte issued the warning to the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) on Friday when he visited soldiers who had been wounded in clashes with the Maute and Abu Sayyaf groups, which had pledged allegiance to the IS group.

Leaders of the MILF and the MNLF, which had signed separate peace deals with the government, assured the President on Saturday there will be no shelter for terrorists in their camps.

Duterte recalled that in the 2015 Mamasapano clash, the security forces did not coordinate with the Moro rebels, which was one reason cited for the debacle of a police commando operation against a Malaysian terror suspect inside an MILF-controlled area that resulted in the death of 44 Special Action Force troopers.

“This time, do not allow the Maute and other terrorist groups to enter or seek refuge in your camps. I’d be forced to tell the AFP (Armed Forces of the Philippines) and the police, ‘Get in,’” he said. “We’ll have a serious misunderstanding if that happens.”

“I do not want war … but if you give territory, that’s another thing. I’d just say forget about peace, let’s just fight,” the President added.

MILF first vice chair Ghadzali Jaafar said “the fear of the President will not happen.”‌

“We don’t have any intention to violate all the agreements we signed with the government,” Jaafar said, adding that helping state enemies is a violation of the accord.

Romeo Sema, a member of the central committee of the Muslimin Sema faction of the MNLF, said they made a clear stand years ago not to tolerate terrorism.

“We will never shelter terrorists because we are sincere in the peace agreement,” Sema said.

MILF chief peace negotiator Mohagher Iqbal said they had reactivated their Adhoc Joint Action Group to run after Hapilon and the Maute brothers in Lanao del Sur.